
Britt's fundraising profile relies heavily on individual donors, who account for 83 percent of her $16.9 million in direct contributions, with PACs and committees comprising 17 percent. Industry-tied contributions show concentration in professional services and finance sectors, with lawyers and lobbyists representing 18 percent of industry money, followed by securities and investment at 10 percent and real estate at 8 percent; individual donors employed in these same sectors—legal, financial, and real estate—reflect this pattern. With 26 stock trades disclosed and a voting record of 70 recorded votes, her financial profile aligns with her donor composition rather than showing divergence between sources.
FOLLOW THE MONEY
Left: who funds Britt (ribbon width = dollars) · right: their votes on bills classified as favoring vs limiting those sectors
“Favors / limits” is an AI classification of each bill's likely effect on the sector — a factual reading of the bill, not a claim about motive. Correlation, not causation. The named bills are in DOES THE MONEY MATCH THE VOTES? below.
DOES THE MONEY MATCH THE VOTES?
How Britt voted on bills touching their biggest donor sectors · 6 of 8 shown, ranked by sector money
Each dollar figure is Britt's total from that donor sector — shown on each related vote, not a per-vote amount. Correlation between funding and votes, not causation; many factors shape any single vote.
TOP SOURCES
AMERICAN ISRAEL PUBLIC AFFAIRS COMMITTEE PAC
PAC
ALABAMA CHRISTIAN CONSERVATIVES
PAC
ALABAMA CONSERVATIVES FUND
PAC
TEAM KATIE
PAC
BEASLEY ALLEN
employees
LEGISLATION
1 sponsored
COMMITTEES
SIMILAR DONOR NETWORKS
Members funded by the same industries — overlapping donor networks may reflect shared policy interests.

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Mary E. Miller
R-IL · House

Joe Neguse
D-CO · House